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Handling Gen Z Students

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I have great sympathy for the teachers of kids my daughter’s generation. After all, these Gen Z kids (born between 1997 and 2012) consider themselves to be peers of everyone – their parents, their teachers – and treat all those folks with the same derisiveness. This drives parents up a wall (and worse), but those teachers have to suffer this fate at the hands of so many kids. Plus, while parental love can help tide over such treatment, what about the poor teacher? It turns out the teachers have found ways to cope with such, er, abuse. ~~   Now that my daughter has entered the feared board exam year (10 th ), the teachers try to, er, motivate the kids by telling them that they are going to end up on the streets, so it is time to shape up.   One kid responded to this (separately, out of class) pointing out that she lived in a 4 BHK, had a Mercedes, so she was definitely not homeless. Upon which a classmate cheerfully corrected her saying that the teacher’s comment wasn’t about h...

Princely States #4: Hyderabad

Last up Hyderabad. In March, 1948, it was the only princely state that hadn’t gone to India or Pakistan. Surrounded by India, in the backdrop of Partition, its attempt to stay independent was viewed through a religious lens by India, explains Sam Dalrymple in Shattered Lands .   The Indian Army, which had commandeered Hyderabad’s military equipment for World War II, now refused to return those arms – why arm a secessionist state? The Nizam tried hard to get weapons smuggled in, but there was no easy way to do that in enough bulk.   By this time, more and more groups were entering Hyderabad, some pro-Hindi, others pro-Muslim. Law and order fell apart with the presence of these armed groups, who also went about slaughtering people of the other religion. In response, the Nizam fell upon on a local militant group called the Razakars. Their anti-Hindu rhetoric evoked fear in the Hindus in Hyderabad and 4 lakh would leave the state. At the same time, 7.5 lakh people would en...

The Alignment Problem

The alignment problem. A phrase Yuval Noah Harari uses in Nexus to describe the mismatch and thus the problems created by today’s information systems. The Internet started off by being free (content), but companies had to find a way to make money. They found ads. But that created a second-order consequence – it became necessary to show more ads, which meant it became key that users spent the maximum possible time online. User “engagement” has thus become the mantra of the Internet, quality (let alone truth) of content be damned. And outrage outsells tranquillity by a mile.   Clausewitz, a Prussian general, wrote a book called On War , in which he famously said that: “War is the continuation of policy by other means.” In his view, wars should not be based on emotions or egos or even righteousness. Rather, war should be used as a political tool and even then, only if it aligns with some overarching political goal. (Indira Gandhi in Bangladesh is pure Clausewitz; George W B...

Princely States #3: Kashmir

Kashmir had a Hindu ruler and a Muslim majority. It was for this reason Jinnah just assumed it would come to Pakistan, and did little to nothing to ensure the outcome. Nehru, on the other hand, had a personal connection to the state, writes Sam Dalrymple in Shattered Lands .   The Partition led to massacres in Punjab, some of which began to spill over into Kashmir. When Muslims in Poonch appealed to Pakistan to do something, an informal go ahead was given but not via the Pakistani Army (that would have amounted to war). Instead, the Muslim League National Guards (somewhat similar to RSS) were assigned the task. They added a tribal army ( lashkar ) to their troops. What about payment? They were authorized to loot places as payment. A fateful decision, as it would turn out.   The troops would spend an inordinate amount of time looting Muzaffarabad, in turn delaying their taking all of Kashmir, most importantly Srinagar airport. The Maharaja of Kashmir asked India to in...

Propaganda, Hate, Social Media and AI

Throughout history, propaganda and hate have existed. Is social media just a new vehicles for what’s always been there? Or is it different/worse, asks Yuval Noah Harari in Nexus .   Yes, he says, social media is different. Because what is seen/shown is determined by non-humans, i.e., algorithms. AI has only added fuel to that fire, but the problem was visible even before AI. Algorithms, for example, auto-play the next video in your feed. They decide what to show you based on what you’ve already liked and seen. They show more of content that provokes outrage and anger. Why? Not out of malice, but because they want to maximize the time you spend online (More time online = more ads = more money). “In a completely free information fight, truth tends to lose.” This is why Harari believes that more information doesn’t always lead to good outcomes. It was true up to a point – countries with free press were better than dictator-controlled news systems. But no more.   Over ...

Princely States #2: Mirror Image Scenarios

Let us go in detail into a couple of princely states and their tales of “dethronement” (it’s the title of another book dedicated to the topic, I decided to use that term). Or as Sam Dalrymple puts it in Shattered Lands : “There is arguably no other revolution in world history that ended so many monarchies in so short a span of time.” ~~   Junagadh first. It had “neither the romance of Kashmir, nor the opulent wealth of Hyderabad”, yet being close to Gujarat, it carried an emotional connect to Gandhi, Patel and Jinnah (all Gujaratis, remember?). Its ruler was a Muslim; the majority of his subjects were Hindu. The Nawab, based on assurances from Jinnah, decided to join Pakistan.   But India was keen to prevent this for multiple reasons, including the presence of Somnath and Dwarka in it. Upon learning of the decision to join Pakistan, Home Minister Patel sent forces to surround Junagadh. Coal and petroleum couldn’t enter, the phone lines were all tapped. As its econ...

Information and (Semitic) Religions

In Nexus , Yuval Noah Harari goes deeper into information networks involving humans. Early religions had a problem – how did one know whether the narrator/priest was indeed conveying the original instructions? What if he was changing things, accidentally or deliberately?   The invention of the book offered a solution. “After tens of thousands of years in which gods spoke to humans via shamans, priests, prophets, oracles and other human messengers, religious movements… began arguing that the gods spoke through this novel technology of the book.” In theory at least, all copies of the book could be identical.   Religions of the book (Semitic ones) though then ran into a new problem. “Who decides what to include in the holy book?” After all, the first copy didn’t come from heaven. But the faithful decided that a “once-and-for-all supreme effort” with the wisest and most trustworthy men could stitch the first book together. (It still led to debates on who would for...